The reason your not having any luck is probally because the price to set one up 
is around $2000.00. Lawyers are about the money in it for them, if you only 
have 10,000 they dont see any dollar signs. Its a complex trust with alot of 
paperwork for them.
 
ropn c7 
--- On Wed, 10/28/09, Merrill <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Merrill <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: [QUAD-L] Trying to stay in my home
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, October 28, 2009, 11:20 PM








What is the mystery to getting a special needs trust, has someone actually 
gotten one?  I have reads enough to understand the idea but getting one seems 
to have a glass ceiling.  No one will speak with me when they learn I am to 
poor with under $10,000 to start.  I had spoken with bankers and lawyers.
Merrill
 




From: Dan [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 2:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [QUAD-L] Trying to stay in my home
 
The very first thing you have to do is to see an elder law attorney. They will 
show you how to set up an irrevocable special needs trust which will protect 
your assets from the government. Once everything is in this irrevocable trust, 
which should include cash, investments, house -- anything of worth, it will be 
protected so that you will then qualify for Medicaid. The rules for these 
trusts differ state-by-state but most of them require a five-year waiting 
period. After five years, all of your assets that are in the trust are hidden 
from the government. And Medicaid well pay for your PCAs, medicine, hospital 
etc.

The assets that are in the trust can be used anyway you want. Which is usually 
stuff not covered by Medicaid. Such as a vehicle or taking a trip. If your 
money is not protected in a special needs irrevocable trust you run the very 
real risk of having the state take it all.

Dan



At 03:40 PM 10/28/2009, Joan Anglin said something that elicited my response:
 


Hello Debbie
I have been where you are, only I did not qualify for Medicare either.  I am 
sure you have contacted the center for independent living in your state, there 
are two, one for eastern and one for western.  They would be your best bet to 
find a PCA and to give you information about your situation.
Nevada has an outstanding program where the clients pay on a sliding scale for 
a PCA based on income, it is not Medicaid directed, as I do not qualify for 
Medicaid either, so it would be worthwhile to talk to the center for 
independent living then applies to your area of the state.  The Nevada System 
allows for up to 5 hours per day.
Before you go to talk to them, figure out how many hours a day you would have 
to have for the bare minimum, and then you would have the starting factor for 
the time that you really need.
I am sure that many others on this list can help you with ideas also.
Good luck
Joan
 
What you do for yourself dies with you.  What you do for others, lives forever.
 
 
 
From: Debbie Hamilton [ mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 10:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [QUAD-L] Trying to stay in my home
 
Have been a quad almost 5 years.  I'm 50 years old and living with my husband.  
I don't qualify for Medicaid, so have had to pay caregivers out of my pocket.  
We live in Wyoming and have no home health available so I advertise in the 
newspaper.  My husband is burnt.  We have a guest house so I'm looking for a 
nanny that could provide 24-hour care.  I haven't had any luck yet.  Does 
anybody out there live alone?  And how do you arrange care?  I don't want to go 
in a nursing home!


Debbie
C4 incomplete/April 2005
 

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